Mrs. Palfrey at the Claremont: An Interview with Screenwriter Ruth Sacks Caplin
By Leslie Weisman, DC Film Society Member
Mrs. Palfrey at the Claremont opened at Landmark's Bethesda Row on April 28.
Leslie Weisman: I’ve just seen Mrs. Palfrey, which has received accolades from reviewers and warm receptions from audiences across the country. What first attracted you to the book? What made you decide it would make a good movie?
Ruth Sacks Caplin: You know, that’s a hard question to ask, because it’s been in my life for so long, I’ve forgotten the first impulse. It had something to do with a combination of the time and the place. I was in England when I read the book, far away from my own home and my own activities and family. And I was reading the books on the racks in the hotel, the old Connaught in London, and this [“Mrs. Palfrey at the Claremont,” Elizabeth Taylor, 1971] happened to be one of the books. I went to that store that has the great food halls, Harrods--in the book, the young man is actually looking for food there--he pretends he works there, he brings his pen and his paper, because he hopes to be a playwright or something wonderful; and he sits there and eats.
So that amazed me. I was in the scene myself, and I could see myself enjoying that role she had--that you could sort of set up housekeeping anywhere with someone that interested you. Because in one part of the book she talks about foraging for some more food, she gets a warm meat pie and she brings it to him--that’s not in the movie--so she is able to act out the role of a sort of a pseudo-housekeeper for a little while, a pseudo-mother, really, or aunt, or grandma, and that tickled me. And it was a time --we had lost a child, and so I was not really interested in current local things, theater and things like that; I was interested in life, and people.
LW: Since you’d had no previous experience as a screenwriter, what inspired you to want to adapt it for the screen?
RSC: I had written various things, but I never chose to write anything for the screen. But yet somehow I could see that--maybe it was because I was in England, which wasn’t my own setting, so it’s as though I was in a play at the time I was making it; there was nothing from home about it. And a movie seemed the right place for the story to be.
LW: How did you adapt the book to screenplay form?
RSC: Well, I bought a book on how to write a screenplay. (Laughs) I had written plays when I was in college a little bit, and I had directed children’s theater when we lived in Charlottesville and the children were in school, and there was a group of adults who wanted the children to have a theater experience. And so I directed children’s plays, I was comfortable doing it. I could think things in the third dimension, the possibilities of how they stood and how they looked, and so on. But I got this book on how to write a proper screenplay--and I followed the rules of how you do this and that, and the camera position and so forth. Actually, I still have the book up in my closet. I haven’t looked at it recently... I should. (Laughs)
LW: What were the most important changes you made in adapting the book, and what elements were you most anxious to keep?
RSC: The most important changes we made--for many of them I must give credit to the director; he’s of a different generation, different tastes and everything else. We eventually became terribly good friends, and when he would give me something that was a little bit too modern, I would say, “Uh-uh-uh-uh,” and he’d say, “Uh... we’re not making a granny picture.” In the book, there is much more given to the mean girl whom he [Ludovic (Ludo) Meyer, the young “busker” played by Rupert Friend, who befriends Mrs. Palfrey] had had briefly as a girlfriend. You know, the mean girl who appears in the park when he’s with Mrs. Palfrey and she says “I wondered what happened to you” and she’s sort of a nasty, snappy thing.
LW: She was so realistic, I was wondering if she was modeled on anyone.
RSC: No; well, she was modeled on the girl in the book, but the girl in the book brushed him off long before that. He has a sexual relationship with her, and in the book, there’s a very poignant scene where he goes to visit her on her job--she works at a sort of art gallery--and she won’t even talk to him: the attitude is “Get out of here, you can’t sit here. I don’t want to talk to you.” She fades out of the picture completely. So that was something that was minimized, that was completely taken away.
And then the other thing that was not included in the movie that’s in the book, is that there was much more about his mother’s biography: she is living with a disagreeable man who is about to leave her, and she is a disagreeable woman, and when he [Ludo] goes there, it’s a very depressing visit. And that was just too much; that’s a whole other story, and it was cut down to just the few words she says when he comes in. He doesn’t ever bring Mrs. Palfrey to her house, and [the director] wanted sort of a little connection, and I thought that was very good--and the fact that the mother just gets a chance to say a few nasty things.
Because later in the book, there’s a whole business about how the man who has been keeping the mother flies the coop, and she has no money to pay her rent. And the poor, poor young man has to ask Mrs. Palfrey for some money to pay his mother’s rent, and he’s humiliated, and she’s sad, and--it’s a complication, and we just didn’t need another complication like that. When you’re reading you have an extra hour, but in a movie you don’t. And it wouldn’t have served any purpose at all, except to show that she backed him up even when she thought it was nothing she had anything to do with, but she did it. And it’s also such an ugly bit she [his mother] has with the man she is living with, who is a bum, and it added nothing to the central story, so we just cut that out.
So the girlfriend with the short, nasty speech, and the mother, who only appeared briefly, were the two that were very much reduced. And of course the mother [Clare Higgins], if she could have been given a scene to herself, she would’ve been a lollapalooza, because at the time we were in London watching, she was in a production of “Hecuba”! And she was bringing the house down--she is a killer. But she would’ve been too strong--and I hadn’t discussed this with anybody, actually--I was very glad that they didn’t go into the whole thing of her life because it was so ugly and bitter, we didn’t need it. It took away from the central theme of how he finds a different modus vivendi.
LW: The book was published in 1971, but the story has been updated for the film--my favorite example being Mrs. Arbuthnot’s observation that “Sex and the City” makes her feel better, knowing she’s not going to be around much longer.
RSC: Well, I had my doubts about that. That was something the director brought in. He also would’ve spiced it up a little more than that, in some places that I won’t go into--you know, when Ludo does get a girlfriend, and so forth. But we agreed it would be nice for him to have a nice girlfriend in this picture. It was not in the book; he never does find the right girl--but he finds himself, which is equally important.
LW: I notice that in the film, Ludo, as an aspiring but indigent young writer, uses a manual typewriter, and of course today that’s not as common as it would’ve been in 1971.
RSC: The reason they put that in is because--this was a laughing matter--I have an ancient manual one which I use, which they thought was uproarious. And that’s an in-house joke.
LW: I thought so! But I had to ask.
RSC: I can’t use anything with a motor. It’s gonna roll away. (Laughter) You’re very perceptive.
LW: When Ludo apologizes to her for having colored the details of their dinner when he wrote about it, Mrs. P replies: “I don’t think accuracy should interfere with a good story.” Was this taken from the book? What are your feelings about it?
RSC: I don’t recall that. I don’t think it was important; I think that was just a little chit-chat that goes on as they were discovering one other’s strengths, tastes, weaknesses and so forth.
LW: The reason I was struck by it as a film person is that there’s always this discussion back and forth: How true to the book should the film be? How true to reality should it be, and can you color things, can you romanticize things...?
RSC: Well, that’s interesting. We were relieved completely--the author was someone I never met, and the author’s husband was someone I never met, and the rights had just been given to us--so I think the only thing I was true to, was my sense of the woman. And I did identify with her very much because she was the main female character; and I have three sons, so at that time, with the young man, and his ambitions and so on, it was very natural and easy to me. And because of the changes that we did make, I didn’t feel that absolute fidelity to the book had to exist. As I say, you know, we cut out the whole business about his mother’s love affair and so on, and what that did to him, which was a major thing in the book because it was part of what made his life so miserable. But we couldn’t take up all of those side issues--we would’ve had a five-hour movie.
You know, the scene where the women in the hotel get together--there’s nothing like that in the book. They were not that friendly with one another, and that chummy, singing and dancing. But they did that themselves. You know, when Joan Plowright took the lead role, and word went through the theatrical community that she was taking the lead role, the director told me that every actress over 50 was begging for a role in the film. You know, because it was obviously a generational something. I didn’t think of it that way. And they were all experienced actresses who don’t get that many jobs these days.
And when they were all together they put together the song-and-dance thing - “It’s never too late to fall in love”--they did that themselves. And it was terrific. That was not in the book. There were certain people, like Mrs. Arbuthnot and so on, who were necessary to the story. But there wasn’t a group of women that made that front-and-center. But all these good actresses came out of the woods and he turned them loose. You know, when they kidded around, he just put it together. And I thought it was marvelous.
LW: It IS wonderful, and as a matter of fact, that had been one of my questions, which you’ve answered without my having asked it. That these are obviously classic stage and film actors--Anna Massey, Marcia Warren...
RSC: Yes! Their bios and everything, you know, came flooding in, I don’t know who the agencies were--I was only there for a couple of days, and he would send me pictures of people: “What do you think of this one or that one?” You know, they’re all mimeographed sheets, and I didn’t really know the names from one another; getting the lead was the only one I was concerned with--and of course the lead couldn’t have been more marvelous. But these other women were experienced actors, and there aren’t that many jobs out there. But they did that wonderful “You’re never too old to fall in love” and every time that’s played, I silently take off my hat to the director, for letting them do it, for knowing when he had a good thing. That wasn’t in the script.
LW: As I watched them, I was trying to think of what they reminded me of, and now I realize: These are British characters, almost out of a 17th-century Hogarth painting.
RSC: Yes! They all belong to a certain time and place, and the requirements of making a life at their age, and their resources and so on--but they all had spirit. Actually, in the book there was a big party, one of the women is moving to go live with her relatives, and she gives a big party, and everybody goes. And they tried to put that in, but Lee [Caplin, the producer who is also Ruth Sacks Caplin's son] said it just got too complicated, and said it didn’t add to the main story, and they just cut that whole section. And I didn’t miss it at all; I had just put it in faithfully because it was in the novel, but I didn’t miss it when it was taken out.
LW: Speaking about the British actors, there are several references to British cultural touchstones, like Mrs. Palfrey’s favorite film, Brief Encounter (David Lean, 1945). I’m not sure how many people here would’ve seen that.
RSC: Brief Encounter was one that I loved. I remembered it very well; that was a very beautiful one that we liked for what it was, at the time we saw it.
LW: The themes of appearance vs. reality, and our inability to communicate, thread through the film. In writing to her daughter about her grandson’s failure to respond to her numerous phone calls, Mrs. P reflects that, “As at many times in her life, she questioned how her words would be interpreted.” Later, Ludo tells her that he and his mother “live on different planets. I sometimes visit hers, but she never visits mine.” When she introduces Ludo as her grandson, one of the residents comments that “The resemblance is uncanny.” Which of course is hilarious, because they’ve just met. At another point, Mrs. P notes how “remarkable” it is that “people see what they want to see.” Was this duality important to your vision of the film, and is it something you hope viewers will take back with them and think about?
RSC: That’s an awfully good question. No, I think it was just sort of in the book, just sort of a sad commentary that we’re on the same planet, and we just don’t always get to know one another well. But that wasn’t the effort of the author; I think this was a happy accident of something; and that isn’t it nice that this can be, if people just are what they are. And that if we can accept others where we find them, and if they appeal to us, who knows what could come out of it? You know, there’s a possibility in so many cases that people don’t follow up.
LW: Yes! Now, is there anything you’d like me to write--something I haven’t asked that you’d like our readers to know?
RSC: There were some little incidents that touched me. I liked the director very much; we became very, very fond of one another. And one of the things that he did was, when Mrs. Palfrey falls in front of Ludo’s apartment, that of course is not Plowright who falls. It’s a woman in a dark coat--a “second” who is doing the fall.
And when I saw her later and chatted with her, and she said she had been a dancer--and of course she can’t dance any more, but the director is nice and he gave her this job, because she’s able to fall gracefully. And after she did her day of the fall and the photographing and so forth the director sent her flowers. His appreciation of “you give what you have to give”--and she was an old-timer of great standing. And this is what she had left to give.
There’s another little part. At the very end of the movie there is a scene where Ludo is going out of the hospital and there’s a woman sitting in a wheelchair; he stops for a moment and just says hello. Some of the people who saw it said that we were making too much of a point, that he had now an understanding of elderly people, and so on and so on. They thought it was was kind of a set piece, and they didn’t know why; it was little, and it didn’t count much, but it was just an odd little set. But the fact was, that the woman in the wheelchair was the dancer who had fallen; and he wanted to have her face on camera. Because she had fallen and nobody knew she did the job. And this could be the last picture she might be making, and her face would show.
Well, I mean, it did nothing for the picture; and I didn’t know why he had it there either when I saw it. But when I realized who it was, this is his final--handing her a bouquet. But that was part of his texture, the director. And his understanding of what it is for someone who has been front and center and who is a dancer to be reduced to falling on the sidewalk. But he gave her flowers when she did her day of acting. There was a sort of a grand chivalry to him that I just loved. And you know, when Plowright was cast, every middle-aged actress in town showed up. It’s a sorority that I was never acquainted with, it has its own ties and its own vibrations.
LW: Wow. And you know, that did attract my attention, because in just that brief moment she’s on screen, you can tell that there is something special about her: that she is an actor, and not just an extra. As a matter of fact, Robert Lang, who plays Mrs. Palfrey’s aspiring love interest, Mr. Osborne...
RSC: Yes, wasn’t he marvelous?
LW: The film is dedicated in part to him. He passed away...?
RSC: Yes. That’s the director, too. I didn’t know the man; I didn’t see him when he was acting. I was only there for about three days, and I didn’t see him do his work. I thought he was marvelous in it. But Dan Ireland is a very, very warm-hearted, affectionate man with great sensitivity and feeling for everybody that he’s involved with, and I love that. So he dedicated it to him. And then, I was talking about mothers and grandmothers and this and that, and he said over dinner one night, “Well, maybe we ought to dedicate the film to mothers and grandmothers everywhere,” and I just laughed or something. And lo and behold, when I saw the credits the other night--it was being shown at the Canadian Embassy for a charity--there was a dedication, “To all the mothers and grandmothers.” (Laughs) That’s Dan Ireland. He just added so much to it, and we had a wonderful rapport with one another. And when I saw it on the big screen, I was aware of so many physical things that he put in, which are not my forte; the words, what people say to one another, are what I go on. But all of the gestures, the proximity of one to another...
LW: And of course all of these older actors, who may have started in silent pictures, would know that actions speak louder than words, especially for them; and would have been trained to use their bodies.
RSC: Yes, indeed. Is there anything else you’d like to ask about?
LW: Nothing that I have written down here, but if there’s anything else you think we should know...
RSC: So much has been written lately, and it’s all been so very kind. I had been prepared, I was braced, you know, because reviews are not all of a kind. And I just told myself I would have to not pay too much attention if they didn’t like this or that. But actually, everything has been so very kind and so positive, I’ve just been kind of astonished at the warmth of the response everywhere. And I think that the young man--my eye wasn’t on the young man particularly; it was always on Joan Plowright--I loved him. But as I’ve seen it now three times on the large screen--the young man I think is absolutely delightful--I think he has an enormous future in front of him. And it’s a type of sweetness that you don’t often get--you know, just a real good-heartedness and niceness without an undertone of pseudo-sophistication or wiseguy, or any of the other loathsome (laugh) habits of the young heroes in movies now. I thought he was just so lovely. And his grace ... his grace, and his manners. You know, perfect.
LW: I recall being impressed with him in one of last year’s films whose title escapes me at the moment; it was a period film...
RSC: I heard he was in Pride & Prejudice. But I heard he played a bad man, and I said there’s no way he played a bad man; he’s a good man. He just oozes sweetness. But it was the group of old ladies who pitched in who were so marvelous. They haven’t gotten as much notice. People enjoy them, but they don’t realize how they put themselves together.
LW: Again, it’s just an absolutely delightful film, and it’s no wonder it’s getting all the raves it’s getting. And I hope you do another screenplay very soon.
RSC: Well, there are a lot of others in the closet, too, but whether they’ll come to anything or not...
LW: Well, we’ll all be hoping they do! Thank you so much.
RSC: You’re welcome. It was a pleasure talking with you.
Crazy Like a Fox: An Interview with Director Richard Squires
By Janice Berliner, DC Film Society Member
Crazy Like a Fox is the story of a man who can’t take “You’re evicted” for an answer. Rather than rent a house in town, he moves into a cave by the creek that runs through his former property. When the new owners of his home leave to spend the winter in Palm Springs, he moves back into the home which brings about a confrontation between the forces of progress and the old guard of Virginia. The film stars Emmy award nominee Royal Shakespeare Company veteran Roger Rees as Nat Banks and two-time Academy Award nominee Mary McDonnell as Nat Bank’s wife, Amy. The film is written and directed by Richard Squires, an actor, director and playwright with La Mama Amsterdam, the Players Theatre of New England and Brecht West theatres.
Janice Berliner: What was the source of inspiration for you to write this screenplay?
Richard Squires: Having made friends with a colorful old eccentric in Virginia, Nat Morison, who lived on an old family farm that had been in his family for generations, I thought, "What would happen if a guy like Nat, where life is as much in the past as it is in the present, were to lose this kind of anchor? How would he respond?" I was trying to show through the movie that this whole civilization he sort of represents is under assault now and is very likely to be obliterated. The next 20 to 30 years will tell. There are large-scale forces operating in Virginia that would prefer to see all of the land between Dulles Airport and Richmond and Charlottesville turned into “Virginia Research Triangle” and they want it seriously developed. I believe Toll Brothers and multi-national computer companies are behind it. The government is behind it too and many people. The area that they picked out to do the development is this Piedmont area, the cradle of American democracy. One product of the suburbanization of the country is an assault on nature and an assault on the people who live close to nature.
JB: What drove you to make the film?
RS: I had always heard that when you are making a film, it is complex and difficult and you should be very strategic about it and pick a subject that you know a lot about and film the movie in an area that you are familiar with. Since I lived in Virginia for a long time and since I thought there was a story to tell people about Virginia, I just thought why not do it here.
JB: You have had a cottage at Wellbourne, the famous farm, for about 25 years. Tell us about Wellbourne.
RS: The Morison family lives there now. They are descended from the Dulaney family, the people who built Wellbourne. Benjamin Dulaney actually was a close friend of George Washington and he gave Washington the horse he rode during the Revolution.
JB: What do you see as the message in the film?
RS: I think that developers respond to incentives in the culture they find themselves in and they have incentives to develop rural areas and turn them into suburban ones. They’ll follow them and you can’t really blame them for following incentives that have been placed in front of them by their culture and civilization. Where I think the responsibility should be, is with the people who created the conditions. The people who did that are the United States Congress. These are issues that need to be solved at a government level. It was the Congress along with the White House who established the interstate system that is the backbone of suburban civilization. At the same time, they did everything that they could to allow the train system in this country to die of “malign neglect.” They wanted to see the trains go bankrupt and they did go bankrupt. And it’s really this replacement of the old system of transportation--primarily rail, but also boat transportation--which this whole new suburban road-based civilization is creating these enormous problems. That’s what I’m ultimately, on a political level, hoping people come to understand. Now, of course the movie isn’t about all that, the movie is just about how it affects one person and how it affects his history and natural environment. It’s a metaphor for indigenous cultures around the world being assaulted by multi-national corporations creating a mono-culture. We’re just getting ready to screen the film in Cannes and we have a German distributor and the story translates very well to other cultures. I think that the people in Europe assume that the developers are the Americans and that the old farmers are the Europeans. America is leading this global charge of multi-national corporations. Everywhere you go, whether you’re going to the first world, second world or third world countries, it’s the same issue of this enormous mono-culture taking over the earth.
JB: What else are you trying to show in Crazy Like a Fox?
RS: Part of what I was trying to show in the movie, is that when you get these systems in place, people are filed into the system, not understanding really what it is that they’re in. People in a free democracy respond to incentives. They go into the pathways that are opened up to them and if their pathways are bad for their emotional, spiritual and psychological health, you can’t really blame the people. They’re just born into a system and they react to it. What’s happening is that this new system is being superimposed on the old one and what I am trying to do in the movie is to show as much as I can, what we’re going to lose. It already has been obliterated between the District line and the Beltway. In this whole community, you can’t find any living history, maybe Mt. Vernon--where a family has been in the same place for eight generations. They’re just independent individuals living life with their own unique family history behind them. I have a whole essay on transportation if you go to the website.
JB: Tell us about the cost of production and why the Internal Revenue Service was involved?
RS: We had petitioned the IRS to give the foundation a tax-exempt status, because we wanted to fund the film through that foundation and we were under the impression that four months would be more than adequate time for them to review the application, so we planned our production schedule accordingly. But it turned out that four months later, the IRS was just beginning to ask questions and so we had to do a lot of last minute adjustments.
JB: What is the Delphi Film Foundation?
RS: It’s an independent foundation that was set up for the purpose of film production. It’s located in Virginia and it will operate as a non-profit foundation in the same way that theatres have gone non-profit. If you go to the website for Crazy Like a Fox, there is an essay that explains non-profit film. The idea is that most cultural enterprises divide into a commercial side and an arts side. With music, there’s rock which is profit-making and classical, which is not. It’s similar to Broadway and regional theatre. It used to be that when you wanted to see Shakespeare or Arthur Miller, you would go to Broadway. But something has happened to Broadway and it seems too risky now. I believe highly evolved accounting firms had something to do with it, in terms of the escalating expense. Well, the same thing has happened to Hollywood. Hollywood used to make great movies, but then the same sort of problems started coming up. I prefer the way regional theatres work. They already have two-thirds of their seats sold before they even decide what their schedule is going to be for the year. They have the same actors that they use over and over again, just like Orson Welles used to do. But that hasn’t happened in film and I think it hasn’t happened, because nobody has figured out that it should happen. I think there are many reasons why independent films should follow the regional theatre movement into a non-profit movement. Instead of just talking about it, why not just do it and see if it actually works. And if it does work, then people will start doing it. I believe the financial structure is the issue. When Broadway refused to produce legitimate theatre, people said the audience doesn’t want it, but that’s not true. There are two non-profit theatres on Broadway that produce plays like Major Barbara and Hamlet and they charge the same ticket prices as other shows. It’s not that the audience wants garbage, it’s just sometimes the production model isn’t equal to the needs of the audience. I think whenever there’s a movement to break away from Hollywood, the industry just goes in and devours it. When there was a movement to start independent film distribution companies, Hollywood just bought them all, so we still have six studios. What I am suggesting is that independent films find a non-profit structure to organize itself around, then Hollywood wouldn’t be able to poach on us. They wouldn’t be able to devour us. There wouldn’t be anything they could do. We could have a parallel universe, like every other performing arts have. New Market is now owned by HBO. As soon as you show any sign of success, they come and buy you out. Six studios control 96 percent of the films in America that are released and it would be good to have a different financial structure, so that the studios couldn’t buy you out. You could have a film industry whose only objective is cultural. You know there are thousands of short films in the country that never get seen, many of which are excellent. Why can’t we see short films, animations, and new independent films all together on one billing?
JB: Getting back to Crazy Like a Fox, did you compose music for the film?
RS: Yes, I wrote one of the songs--when Nat is building the cave and when the family is singing together. I worked out with David Kane, the makeup of the actual pieces the movie would have.
JB: Was it difficult for you to edit the film?
RS: I enjoyed it. It took 18 months to edit the movie and 30 days to film it.
JB: How did you find Middleburg, Virginia?
RS: I found it on a bicycle. When I was 24 years old, I took an 1800 mile bike trip through Tucson to the Sierra Nevada and Death Valley. When I came back, I discovered The Plains and Middleburg.
JB: Are you leaving the theatre for film?
RS: I have two projects. One is a theatre project, “The Fall of Albion,” and the second project is for film called “The Big Dreamer.” The story line goes, “what if you discovered that you could no longer tell whether you were awake and living in the real world or dreaming. And that ultimately, it made no difference since both existences are basically the same. It’s a comedy.
JB: Thank you very much for the interview.
RS: You’re welcome.
Crazy Like a Fox opens in DC on May 5.
Free Zone: Interview with Director Amos Gitai
From the press notes
Question: Does the free zone in the film actually exist?
Amos Gitai: Yes, in eastern Jordan, an area has been set up as an economic free zone. There are no customs and no taxes. People from neighboring countries like Iraq, Egypt, Syria and Israel come here to sell and buy cars. I'm interested in these pockets of freedom in the Middle East where people of different origins can mingle and find things they can do in common. I'm interested in observing how people of the region are connecting to other people through everyday activities, and not only through political gestures. At this point we have been deceived continuously by the big politicians. It's necessary to start with the little details and maybe through these details we can transform our situation. Buying a car, fixing it, crossing the borders, sharing a story, a meal together... I'm interested in free zones where things like this can happen.
Q: And peace exists in this free zone?
AG: Yes. Complete peace. You can even see Israeli buses being sold to Saudis or Syrians. These countries normally don't even have diplomatic relations since they are officially in a state of war. But in the free zone, commerce gives people a kind of pragmatic attitude. I think such a less charged nationalistic attitude could lead to moving beyond the actual situation. I'm interested in exploring every vector that can create a meeting point. Trade is creating a common ground. People are opening their borders to cooperate and have common projects with economic value.
Q: Borders play an important role in the film...
AG: In the Middle East, borders are a real issue. It's always physical borders, political borders, which lead to mental borders. I've become very interested in borders--how they are crossed, who and what crosses them. My previous film, Promised Land, was about the trafficking of women across the Egyptian border into Israel. In Free Zone, it's about the voluntary transfer of a car across the Israeli-Jordanian border.
Q: You chose an innovative way of setting up the story...
AG: The film starts in Jerusalem in front of the Wailing Wall, the remnant of the sacred shrine of the ancient temple destroyed by the Romans. A young woman, Rebecca (Natalie Portman), is in a car driven by Hanna (Hanna Laszlo). We don't know who they are or where they're going yet, but the journey starts there. To show their memories and also the context in which these women are together, I use a series of layers of images - sometimes 8 layers simultaneously. I was interested in exploring how to integrate into the narrative fragments of desynchronized memories. We see Rebecca and Hanna continuing to drive to the Free Zone and at the same time we have this voyage being interrupted and charged with memories and references to how they came to be in this moving envelope called a car.
Q: Three women: one American, one Israeli, one Palestinian. How would you describe these
characters?
AG: Hanna, the Israeli, is strong, charismatic, matter-of-fact. A bit of a bully, but also charming. All those characteristics at the same time which is a bit like an Israeli, in general. That's how I see us. Overbearing, but sincere. Not always respectful, but refreshing in a way. That's everything I like and resent about Israelis. I guess it's also a portrait of myself. I'm not different from my people... I always allow myself to be more critical with my people than with others. Leila (Hiam Abbas), the Palestinian, is more reserved, more respectful of others' personal space. She is shocked by Hanna's immediate informal attitude. Rebecca is a young woman trying to interpret the world for herself, to make up her identity. She's an American with an Israeli father and a non-Jewish mother. According to Jewish law, she is not Jewish. But Rebecca herself feels Jewish, even Israeli.
Q: Did you write the role of Rebecca for Natalie Portman?
AG: The screenplay went through a lot of transformations. The original version was written about men and at one point I decided to make it the story of three women. When Natalie Portman came to the project, we had a couple of early conversations and I decided to integrate some of her biographical elements into the story. I thought it would be interesting to have somebody from outside, kind of having her own point of view about what she sees and how she understands it, how she interprets it. Unlike Rebecca in the film, both of Natalie's parents are Jewish. But like the character she plays, I think she's researching who she is, what the world is about. I think she's using cinema in a good way as a means to exploring and understanding the world, which is something I try to do myself.
Q: In a similar way, you also integrated into the film the real stories behind the locations...
AG: Sometimes I like very much when a film location has a kind of an echo into the narrative. The oasis in Free Zone is actually a place where a Palestinian man, Mussa Alami, founded a farm orphanage for Palestinian refugee children after 1948. It's a place I remember reading about when I was 16 or 17. During its history, two attempts were made to burn it down, once by Palestinians, once by Israelis. I used the true story behind this farm to enrich the narrative of the film.
Q: Free Zone appears more peaceful than some of your previous films...
AG: More and more, I stress humanizing characters, to find ways to express their complexities and contradictions. The characters shown are accessible. Each one with its purposes, its rhythm, potential for anger, disagreement, love, affection. In a way, the film loves all its characters. This represents an understanding of relativity. By establishing relativity, the characters are softened. Not every film should be about rage.
Q: Are you optimistic about eventual peace in the Middle East?
AG: The Europeans, 50 years after they burned the entire continent and killed tens of millions of people, came to the simple conclusion that they are allowed to have conflicts, but they just don't need to kill for it. I think that relatively in the Middle East we did not kill so many people and we have not created such outrageous things as have happened in Europe. But it's definitely time for us to understand that we are entitled not to agree and even to have conflicts, we just don't need to have wars each time we disagree. We have to find other ways to negotiate our differences. We are not obliged to create a uniform society, a uniform Middle East. We can still hold on to our different cultures, our languages. We can continue to disagree. Even if there will be peace, there will remain conflicts. Maturity is about disagreeing without using force. This is true for personal relations and entire nations.
Q: Why did you choose to make a film with only women as the leading characters?
AG: Men are the generals, the military guys. They're usually the heads of states in the Middle East, with the exception of Golda Meir. We see the great achievements of men as keeping this area in constant war. It might be interesting to allow women to take over. Maybe they would apply a more down to earth and humanistic vision to our conflict. At the same time, I don't want to idealize women too much. Women are also capable of being killers. I consider myself non-racist and non-sexist, so I think we all have the potential of being angelic but also monstrous. I think that today, because women are still subject to sexist attitudes, they are agents of change in a positive way. Not because of some sort of DNA composition, but because of the social circumstances. They haven't yet been allowed to achieve their maximum liberty. Maybe the condition of not always being in the most powerful positions has given them a good critical way of looking at things. Women can be good agents of change, but they will have to assume this. It won't be given. It can't be taken for granted.
Q: For the first time, you shot a film in Jordan...
AG: Not only a first for me, It’s the first Israeli film shot in Jordan in cooperation with the Jordanian Royal Film Commission. There are no cinema treaties between the two countries, but the Jordanians helped make the film shoot possible. They were really cooperative and open, even when I explained that I preferred to shoot a common gas station or the barren free zone instead of tourist’s sites like Petra. There was no intervention in the content and they just went along with what the film needed. Initially, of course, there was a kind of resistance between the Israeli and Jordanian crews, but this melted down after only a few hours and relations became very warm. I think that just the shooting of the film is a good example of how political borders can be crossed. It was really a great experience.
Free Zone Opens at Landmarks E Street Cinema May 5.
Calendar of Events
FILMS
American Film Institute Silver Theater
A series of films directed by the multi-talented Elaine May, who also acted, scripted and adapted, starts May 5 and includes The Heartbreak Kid (1972), A New Leaf (1971), Mikey and Nicky (1976) and Ishtar (1987).
Beginning May 26 and running through early July is a comprehensive Robert Altman retrospective to coincide with the release of his newest film A Prairie Home Companion. The films in May include The Player (1992), Gosford Park (2001) and Buffalo Bill and the Indians (1976). More in June and July.
Also beginning in late May is a Sean Connery retrospective--minus the James Bond films (Bond films will be shown later this year). Sir Sean Connery is an AFI Life Achievement Award recipient in 2006. Films in May include The Untouchables (1987) and The Name of the Rose (1986). More films in June and July.
Chen Kaige's new film The Promise starts May 5 and a newly restored print of Jean-Paul Melville's Army of Shadows (1943) starring Lino Ventura and Simone Signoret opens May 12. See the website for other films.
Freer Gallery of Art
The Freer concludes a short series of recent Indonesian films this month. On May 7 at 2:00pm is Single (Hanung Bramantyo, 2006), on May 14 at 2:00pm is After School Diary (Hanung Bramantyo, 2005), on May 19 at 7:00pm is Eliana, Eliana (Riri Riza, 2002), and on May 21 at 2:00pm is Gie (Riri Riza, 2005).
National Gallery of Art
The Billy Wilder retrospective concludes in May with Witness for the Prosecution (1957) on May 13 at 3:00pm, Irma la Douce (1963) on May 21 at 4:00pm, The Fortune Cookie (1966) on May 27 at 12:30pm, Avanti! (1972) on May 27 at 3:00pm, People on Sunday (1929) and Bad Seed (1934) on May 28 at 4:00pm, The Apartment (1959) on May 29 at 12:00pm and The Spirit of St. Louis (1957) on May 29 at 2:30pm.
"The Flaherty" is an annual seminar showcasing experimental and documentary films, named after the pioneering documentary filmmaker Robert Flaherty. A selection of films shown at that seminar will be screened on May 20 at 2:30pm, including The Colonial Misunderstanding (Jean-Marie Teno, 2004), Grandfather Cheno and Other Stories (Juan Carlos Rulfo, 1995), Cesare Lombrosco (1976) and Symbiopsychotaxiplasm (William Greaves, 1968).
Art films shown in May include "Video Master: Nam June Paik" on May 13 at 1:00pm and May 20 at 12:30pm with a sample of films from his career. On May 7 at 4:00pm is Pather Panchali (Satyajit Ray, 1955) with a lecture by Partha Mitter on Ray's work. On May 14 at 4:30pm is Who Gets to Call It Art? (Peter Rosen, 2005) about Henry Geldzahler, curator at the Metropolitan Museum of Art.
Hirshhorn Museum and Sculpture Garden
Films by experimental filmmaker Jonas Mekas will be shown in two separate programs on May 4 (including Walden and Happy Birthday, John) and May 5 at 8:00pm (Reminiscense of a Journey to Lithuania. Jonas Mekas, who established the Anthology Film Archives and founded the journal Film Culture, will discuss his work on May 11 at 7:00pm.
The National Postal Museum
Postman in the Mountains (1998), a feature film about postmen who deliver mail on foot in a remote region on China will be shown on May 8, 9, 10, 11, and 12 at 2:00pm and May 13 at 1:00pm and 3:00pm.
National Museum of Women in the Arts
On May 10 at 7:00pm are two Chilean documentaries from the Pinochet years, La Flaca Alejandra (Carmen Castillo, 2003) and I Wonder What You Will Remember of September (Cecilia Cornejo, 2004). On May 14 is a special program of short films from around the world for Mother's Day celebrating mother/child relationships. On May 17 at 7:00pm is the US premiere of Marcela Said's Opus Dei: A Silent Crusade (2005), a documentary about the secretive Opus Dei group. On May 18 at 6:15pm Pinochet's Children (Paula Rodgriguez, 2002) a documentary about the Pinochet years and on May 18 at 8:00pm is I Love Pinochet (Marcela Said, 2002), another documentary about dictator Augusto Pinochet, this time from his follower's point of view. Two music documentaries are shown on May 25 at 6:30pm, Antes Que Todo (Maria Paz, 2005) and Dear Nona Tiziana Panizza, 2004). A documentary about Chilean soprano Veronica Villarroel Accidental Diva (Lydia Bendersky, 2003) will be shown on May 25 at 8:00pm, along with two short films. Julie Dash's Daughters of the Dust (1991), part of the "Sisters in Cinema" series, will be seen on May 31 at 7:00pm.
Films on the Hill
On May 10 at 7:00pm is Slave Ship (Tay Garnett, 1937), an adventure film set in the slave trading days with Warner Baxter, George Sanders and Mickey Rooney. On May 17 at 7:00pm is The Adventures of Mark Twain (Irving Rapper, 1944), featuring an extraordinary performance by Fredric March as America's beloved storyteller and humorist. March was helped in his role by Twain's only surviving daughter who, when she saw a picture of Fredric March as Twain in the newspaper, thought it was a picture of her father. On May 24 at 7:00pm is International Lady (Tim Whelan, 1941), a WWII espionage film starring George Brent, Basil Rathbone and Ilona Massey.
Washington Jewish Community Center
On May 1 at 7:30pm is The Tollbooth (Debra Kirschner, 2004), a comedy about a Jewish family in Brooklyn. On May 8 at 7:30pm is Jews of Iran (Ramin Farahani, 2005), a documentary about the few remaining Jewish communities left in Iran. On May 23 at 7:30pm is A Cantor's Tale (Eric Greenberg Anjou, 2005), winner of the 2005 Washington Jewish Film Festival's Audience Award for Best Documentary, about Cantor Jackie Mendelson. On May 30 at 7:30pm is Anya (in and out of focus) (Marian Marzynski, 2005) a documentary made through 30 years of home movies about the filmmaker's daughter. Director Marian Marzynski will be present to discuss the film.
Goethe Institute
The Goethe Institute continues its soccer-themed films from around the world. On May 1 at 4:00pm and 6:30pm is Depth of Field (Gil Mehmert, 2004); on May 8 at 4:00pm and 6:30pm is Adelante Muchachas! (Erika Harzer and Kalle Stayman, 2004) with midfielder Joanna Lohman and other members of Washington Freedom in attendance after the 6:30pm show to discuss the film. On May 15 at 4:00pm and 6:30m is Football As Never Before (Hellmuth Costard, 1970), a tribute to George Best. On May 22 at 6:00pm is a collection of short films from 28 countries including documentaries, animation, fiction, and experimental films about soccer.
May 9 is "Europe Day" when the French Foreign Minister proposed European integration in a speech in 1950. Two films will be shown to commemorate this event. On May 9 at 7:45pm is One Day in Europe (Hannes Stoehr, 2005) preceded by a panel discussion "Phoenix from the Ashes: European Integration after World War II and during the Cold War" at 6:30pm. On May 10 at 6:30pm is L'Auberge espagnole (Cedric Klapisch, 2002) introduced by a representative from the EU Commission.
French Embassy
The Embassy of France announces the revival of its "Ciné-Club" which has been dormant for several years. Films will be shown at the Embassy and at the Avalon. On May 25 at 7:00pm is Games of Love and Chance (Abdellatif Kechiche, 2003), a comedy of manners taking place in the Paris suburbs where many North Africans live but inspired by 18th century French writer Pierre Carlet de Chamblain de Marivaux. On May 24 at 7:00pm is When the Sea Rises (Yolande Moreau and Gilles Porte, 2005), winner of the 2005 César, a romantic comedy starring Yolande Moreau. Reservations are required.
National Archives
Academy Award winning documentaries from 1947-1960 will be shown May 3-5. The first program on May 3 at 7:00pm includes First Steps (1947) about physical therapy for children, The Secret Land (1948) about the military possibilities of Antarctica, Toward Independence (1949) about rehabilitation of soldiers injured in the war, A Chance to Love (1949) about the creation of a Boys Town in Italy, and So Much For So Little (1949) a Chuck Jones cartoon explaining the U.S. Health Department to the public. On May 4 at 7:00pm are two feature length documentaries The Titan: Story of Michelangelo (1950) and Serengeti Shall Not Die (1959). On May 5 at 3:00pm is The Alaskan Eskimo (1953), Thursday's Children ((1954) about a school for the deaf, Helen Keller in Her Story (1955), The True Story of the Civil War (1956) and Glass (1959) about glassblowing. On May 5 at 7:00pm is Why Korea? (1950) and The Sea Around Us (1952) and The Horse with the Flying Tail (1960) about a show horse.
Two films for families are Valiant (2005) on May 13 at noon, an animated film from Disney and National Treasure (2004) on May 19 at 7:00pm and May 20 at noon.
National Museum of Natural History
On May 14 at 2:00pm is Kuyima, Dance with the Clouds (1997) about the El Vizcaino nature reserve. Filmmaker Fabricio Feduchy will be present to discuss his film. On May 21 at 2:00pm is Travels through Blue Mexico (1998), exploring the coast of Mexico from Baja to Yucatan. On May 27 at 2:00pm is Cozumel, the Submarine Forest (1998) about Mexico's Caribbean coral reefs.
The Avalon
The latest entry in "Asian Cinevisions" is Rewind on May 10 at 8:00pm. On May 3 at 7:30pm is Jews and Christians: A Journey of Faith, a documentary about common beliefs of Jews and Christians and how they can understand one another.
The Avalon takes part in the new "Ciné-Club" of French films with Heading South (Laurent Cantet, 2005) on May 17 at 8:00pm. See the French Embassy for others.
Smithsonian Associates
Bougainville Sky (Nick Agafonoff, 2005), shown on May 9 at 6:30pm, is the story of an unarmed peace-keeping force on the South Pacific island of Bougainville. Australian songwriter Iain Smith's radio and music program became a legend and contributed to the successful peacekeeping mission. Iain Smith will be present to introduce the film.
On May 21 at 1:00pm is Agata and the Storm (Silvio Soldini, 2004), an ensemble comedy from Italy.
FILM FESTIVALS
The Sixth Annual International Jewish Film Festival
Thirteen films from around the world include such titles as Watermarks, Rene and I, Live and Become, Only Human, Another Road Home, Walk on Water, and When Do We Eat?. The films are shown at Cinema Arts Theater in Fairfax, the Reston Town Center and the Jewish Community Center of Northern Virginia through May 11.
Previous Storyboards
April, 2006
March, 2006
February, 2006
January, 2006
December, 2005
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